The Clean Shipping
Coalition criticises container ship giant Maersk for its statement that is
considers to flag out end-of-life vessels from the Danish or other European
registries in order to circumvent the European Ship Recycling Regulation. The
Clean Shipping Coalition, a global coalition of nine organisations promoting
sustainable shipping, argues that Maersk’s move “seriously undermines its
credibility as a responsible ship operator”.
John Maggs, senior
policy advisor at Seas At Risk and president of the Clean Shipping Coalition,
said: “Maersk is a European company and should abide by European laws.
Suggesting that it might use a flag of convenience to escape EU ship breaking
rules designed to protect the environment and worker safety is scandalous, and
will seriously undermine its credibility as a responsible ship owner and operator.”
Sotiris Raptis,
shipping officer at Transport & Environment, said: “While Maersk supports
innovation in reducing air polluting emissions, this move shows a cavalier
attitude towards the environmental impacts of dismantling ships in the
intertidal zone. Maersk needs to reverse course on practices that it previously
denounced and that would never be allowed in Europe.”
Maersk has recently
decided to go back to India to have its old ships scrapped in yards that
operate breaking activities in the intertidal zone of the beach. These yards
will not be listed by the European Commission as they cannot comply with the
requirements under the European Ship Recycling Regulation.
“Maersk has sent a
clear signal: either European environmental regulation accommodates for its
practices in India, or the world’s largest ship owner will just ignore the Ship
Recycling Regulation by flagging out”, says Patrizia Heidegger, Director of the
NGO Shipbreaking Platform.
“The threat to
resort to non-European flags amounts to blackmailing law makers who seek to
ensure that European ship owners have to maintain European standards in their
business activities around the world”.
Source: port
news. 9 June 2016
http://en.portnews.ru/news/220848/
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